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Who's Having Fish For Dinner Today?
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Even though we're non-believers, we always have fish on Good Friday - a throwback to childhood I think - a bit like having turkey at Christmas. Does anyone else still follow the tradition?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I am in Penzance for a few days and I will be having fish for lunch today, a lovely crab sandwich, on brown bread. In fact, I might even have it for breakfast ! For my dinner, I shall have a real Cornish Pasty, with some Jersey Royal potatoes. I paid £3 for 1.5 kg, which is expensive I know, but a treat never did anybody any harm !
For tea sometime over the weekend I shall have some nice home made scones, from a lady near my caravan site, with clotted cream.
God....no wonder I am a tad on the fat side ....well, a lot actually !
For tea sometime over the weekend I shall have some nice home made scones, from a lady near my caravan site, with clotted cream.
God....no wonder I am a tad on the fat side ....well, a lot actually !
I don't remember Good Friday being any different to any other Friday, food-wise. I was brought up as a Catholic, and my Dad was Irish and a fishmonger, so we had fish every Friday ! But we would have a roast chicken on Easter Sunday. Chicken was expensive in the 1950's, unlike now, but it tasted better. Or maybe that is the passage of time playing tricks with my memory.
there's no requirement to eat fish at all - the rule is about abstaining from other meat. A vegetarian meal would do as well.
For all the significance of Good Friday, mikey is right: Christians were meant to abstain from meat every Friday. They still are, although the rule may be relaxed if they perform some other good service instead, such as saying extra Rosaries.
For all the significance of Good Friday, mikey is right: Christians were meant to abstain from meat every Friday. They still are, although the rule may be relaxed if they perform some other good service instead, such as saying extra Rosaries.